Seattle City Councilwoman
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Five years ago the Left was denying they were Socialists. If you said they were you were laughed at and told you were silly to think that would ever happen. HERE we are just 5 years later, the Left is now openly embracing Socialism, and a few uninformed people want me to shut up about the progression into Communism. Shoving ones head in the sand makes one blind.
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Fine. Maybe y'all are right. Maybe the fraction of the 300-some-odd million people who are venture capitalists and entrepreneurs and other prime movers, will just sit with their thumbs up their asses and go, "Welp, I guess we're screwed now! It was fun while it lasted!"
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Fine. Maybe y'all are right. Maybe the fraction of the 300-some-odd million people who are venture capitalists and entrepreneurs and other prime movers, will just sit with their thumbs up their asses and go, "Welp, I guess we're screwed now! It was fun while it lasted!"
@Catseye3 said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
Fine. Maybe y'all are right. Maybe the fraction of the 300-some-odd million people who are venture capitalists and entrepreneurs and other prime movers, will just sit with their thumbs up their asses and go, "Welp, I guess we're screwed now! It was fun while it lasted!"
Those people’s publicly espoused politics have been hard left for quite some time now.
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Fine. Maybe y'all are right. Maybe the fraction of the 300-some-odd million people who are venture capitalists and entrepreneurs and other prime movers, will just sit with their thumbs up their asses and go, "Welp, I guess we're screwed now! It was fun while it lasted!"
@Catseye3 4 years ago Bernie Sanders was essentially cheated out of the nomination by “establishment” democrats, and the socialist wing still made significant gains in representation in AOC and her friends. This year, it took a last minute all hands on deck come to Jesus moment to bring together all of the “establishment” democrats to rally behind Joe and even that may have failed if he would have had to keep campaigning against Bernie. Frankly, if Bernie was to come back and run as an independent, I think he would now beat Joe, but would likely toss the election to Trump, so I don’t think it will happen. The Democrat party is dying right before our eyes. Unfortunately, so is the Republican...
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@Catseye3 4 years ago Bernie Sanders was essentially cheated out of the nomination by “establishment” democrats, and the socialist wing still made significant gains in representation in AOC and her friends. This year, it took a last minute all hands on deck come to Jesus moment to bring together all of the “establishment” democrats to rally behind Joe and even that may have failed if he would have had to keep campaigning against Bernie. Frankly, if Bernie was to come back and run as an independent, I think he would now beat Joe, but would likely toss the election to Trump, so I don’t think it will happen. The Democrat party is dying right before our eyes. Unfortunately, so is the Republican...
@LuFins-Dad said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
4 years ago Bernie Sanders was essentially cheated out of the nomination by “establishment” democrats
Nah, Hillary won the Democratic primary of 2016 by getting more votes, more than Bernie, more than any other candidate.
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@Catseye3 4 years ago Bernie Sanders was essentially cheated out of the nomination by “establishment” democrats, and the socialist wing still made significant gains in representation in AOC and her friends. This year, it took a last minute all hands on deck come to Jesus moment to bring together all of the “establishment” democrats to rally behind Joe and even that may have failed if he would have had to keep campaigning against Bernie. Frankly, if Bernie was to come back and run as an independent, I think he would now beat Joe, but would likely toss the election to Trump, so I don’t think it will happen. The Democrat party is dying right before our eyes. Unfortunately, so is the Republican...
@LuFins-Dad
"The Democrat party is dying right before our eyes. Unfortunately, so is the Republican..."I agree.
Both suffer from a similar malaise; their respective membership and base are divided against themselves. The Democrats have been dying their slow death since the 1970's. The terminal illness of the Republicans is more recent only becoming apparent during the post Reagan era and corresponding to the influence of strategists like the late Lee Atwater and legislators such as Newt Gingrich.
It won't really matter in the long run, the Trump era will fade and a new Republican movement will arise and prevail. It will have broad appeal and command almost total support.
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@LuFins-Dad said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
4 years ago Bernie Sanders was essentially cheated out of the nomination by “establishment” democrats
Nah, Hillary won the Democratic primary of 2016 by getting more votes, more than Bernie, more than any other candidate.
@Axtremus said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
@LuFins-Dad said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
4 years ago Bernie Sanders was essentially cheated out of the nomination by “establishment” democrats
Nah, Hillary won the Democratic primary of 2016 by getting more votes, more than Bernie, more than any other candidate.
One has to be 7 kinds of a fool to believe that.
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@LuFins-Dad
"The Democrat party is dying right before our eyes. Unfortunately, so is the Republican..."I agree.
Both suffer from a similar malaise; their respective membership and base are divided against themselves. The Democrats have been dying their slow death since the 1970's. The terminal illness of the Republicans is more recent only becoming apparent during the post Reagan era and corresponding to the influence of strategists like the late Lee Atwater and legislators such as Newt Gingrich.
It won't really matter in the long run, the Trump era will fade and a new Republican movement will arise and prevail. It will have broad appeal and command almost total support.
@Renauda said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
It won't really matter in the long run, the Trump era will fade and a new Republican movement will arise and prevail. It will have broad appeal and command almost total support.
As a backlash, you mean?
This is what I was trying to articulate above -- not well!
Can you recommend some writers who talk about this?
I found a couple of articles in Pew Research, that show that "Americans are narrowly hopeful about the future of the United States over the next 30 years but more pessimistic when the focus turns to specific issues," and "Most Americans Say There Is Too Much Economic Inequality in the U.S., but Fewer Than Half Call It a Top Priority." The impression is that the trend of one direction over the other is not large. You get the feeling that things could go either way, depending on many things.
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Donna Brazile seems to think Hilary stole not only the nomination but the party as well.
https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/11/02/clinton-brazile-hacks-2016-215774
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The Democratic Party establishment managed to hold on longer than the Republican. The GOP capitulated in 2016. The Democratic establishment held on in 2016 only through the strength (within the party) of the Clinton brand and held on in 2020 largely due to some withdrawals at the key moment before SC. Really they pulled the chute at 500 feet.
Seems highly unlikely they’ll be able to do that in 2024. I’m already worried about who will lead the house in 2021. IIRC Pelosi’s deal was she wouldn’t run for leadership again.
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@Renauda said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
It won't really matter in the long run, the Trump era will fade and a new Republican movement will arise and prevail. It will have broad appeal and command almost total support.
As a backlash, you mean?
This is what I was trying to articulate above -- not well!
Can you recommend some writers who talk about this?
I found a couple of articles in Pew Research, that show that "Americans are narrowly hopeful about the future of the United States over the next 30 years but more pessimistic when the focus turns to specific issues," and "Most Americans Say There Is Too Much Economic Inequality in the U.S., but Fewer Than Half Call It a Top Priority." The impression is that the trend of one direction over the other is not large. You get the feeling that things could go either way, depending on many things.
I can't recommend anyone in particular, although I am sure there are some discussing this scenario.
My thoughts on the matter come from watching and reading trends. The left is historically factionalised and tends devour itself in the absence of a strong guiding hand. The right while being less ideologically defined, tends towards consolidation although it too can be every bit as dogmatic the left as it moves towards its own extremes.
The predicament the US is facing is that its two party system is undergoing fundamental changes. Neither party base is content to occupy the centre and is instead looking to the more extreme of its membership for direction. Both parties are targetting populist appeal to gain broad support. Essentially, both parties are equally bankrupt of ideas and any sense of morality.
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@Larry said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
Jon said that??? This I gotta see for myself!!!
Shouldn’t be remotely surprising if you’ve paid any attention to my posts. I repeatedly said I would pull the libertarian lever back when it looked like Bernie was going to win the primary. And I’ve been consistently and loudly critical of woke ideology since it completed its long march through the institutions c. 2012 or so.
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@Larry said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
Let's see... you're leaning libertarian, yet you would vote for Bernie.......
That's not at all what he said:
I repeatedly said I would pull the libertarian lever back when it looked like Bernie was going to win the primary
Also, I remember Jon being critical of the Wall Street protestors back in the day when drum circles were a thing.
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The problem with grievance-based discourse (from both parties) is that it makes revolutionary ideas sound appealing.
This country is great. Like truly. Other countries would love to have the problems we have (for the most part). While we need more than incrementalism in a few areas (healthcare costs, inequality, automation) - but we don't need revolutionary change.
But that sort of constructive conversation isn't happening anywhere.
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The problem with grievance-based discourse (from both parties) is that it makes revolutionary ideas sound appealing.
This country is great. Like truly. Other countries would love to have the problems we have (for the most part). While we need more than incrementalism in a few areas (healthcare costs, inequality, automation) - but we don't need revolutionary change.
But that sort of constructive conversation isn't happening anywhere.
@xenon said in Seattle City Councilwoman:
inequality
There is no inequality where it matters - under the law and opportunity.
None.
Dead, solid exactly equal
And has been for a long time
If you want equality of outcome, try Russia or North Korea, outcomes are equal for all